A Library of American Literature From the Earliest Settlement to the Present Ti

Cover A Library of American Literature From the Earliest Settlement to the Present Ti
A Library of American Literature From the Earliest Settlement to the Present Ti
Stedman, Edmund Clarence, 1833-1908, Ed
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" Jove smiled, and to their fate resigned The restless, thankless, rebel kind ; Left to themselves, they went to work, First signed a treaty with king Stork.
He swore that they, with his alliance, To all the world might bid defiance ; Of lawful rule there was an end on't, And frogs were henceforth independent.
At which the croakers, one and all, Proclaimed a feast, and festival ! But joy to-day brings grief to-morrow; Their feasting o'er, now enter sorrow !
The Stork grew hungry, longed for fis
...h ; The monarch could not have his wish; In rage he to the marshes flies, And makes a meal of his allies.
Then grew so fond of well-fed frogs, He made a larder of the bogs ! Say, Yankees, don't you feel compunction, At your unnatural rash conjunction?
Can love for you in him take root, Who's Catholic, and absolute?
I'll tell these croakers how he'll treat 'em; Frenchmen, like storks, love frogs to eat 'em.
THE PRESENT AGE. [The New Hampshire Gazette. 1779. ] OF all the ages ever known, The present is the oddest; For all the men are honest grown, And all the women modest.


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